Muz 'n' Shell
Muzzy and I started traveling in 1990. Our first trip was to Thailand. Muzzy was in the Merchant Marines in another incarnation and had traveled all over the world. I had done a lot of internal traveling, but waited a lifetime to be able to really travel. After that first trip I was definitely hooked. We went to Bali in '93. In '96 we returned to Thailand to visit our daughter Sarah at her Peace Corps site in Petchabun province. In '99 we went to Nepal and Thailand, in '03 to Laos and Thailand, and in '05/'06 back to Thailand, Laos and Burma. In '07 we returned to Nepal, Laos and Thailand with our dear traveling companion Kyp. Muzzy and I have been incredibly fortunate in making the trip up the Nam Tha river twice to Luang Namtha. Laos is very special to us. I just hope we get to keep traveling. The photos posted on this site are all by Mr. Muz unless otherwise stated, and he is a grand and wonderful photographer!
Thursday, January 21, 2010
Shopping in Tucson
I can't deny that the local weather makes me feel like its spring, but I know in my heart of hearts that freezing temps could descend at any moment. All that aside, I am mourning the lack of travel this year. Mr. Muzzy is in a play and the best I can do is 4 days in Tucson for the Gem and Mineral extravaganza that I have long heard about but never visited. I have my ticket and a place to stay, so there will be at least 4 days of warm weather and different vegetation, not to mention aisles and aisles of goodies to look over. Mr. Muzzy will be performing that weekend, so it is a "girl's time". I like it. And on the horizon is a trip to Mexico, Oaxaca to be exact, later this year. THEN....I am going back to Laos and Thailand next winter come hell or high water...don't know about the rest of you, but that is where I will be. And as for poor dear Bijoux, its been a rough sea these last 5 years, especially the last 2, but I feel a change coming. I'm hot on the trail of the "fish waffle" pan I saw in Chiang Mai in 2007, and having lost some weight I'll be dusting off my phasins, moving the hooks over, and trying to figure out how to sell kanom krok and fish waffles at the Farmer's Market. I have joined a writing group and have begun to realize just how awful my poor Haight Ashbury memoir really is, but it gives me something to do late at night and early in the morning when mortality and time weigh heavily on my soul. And re-inventing is right up my alley...does the world seem crazier to you all too or is it just me? Politics in the US are just right out of my realm now. I think I have given up and will concentrate on my karmic future.
Tuesday, October 27, 2009
The Beautiful Wedding
Muz and I took off for LA last Thursday to celebrate the wedding of Muzzy's sister Irene. It was a grand, gala affair in full LA style. Outdoors in the 80 degree October weather, perfect, halcyon, palm trees, pomegranates, lemon trees and houses throughout Alta Dena and Pasadena decked out in full Halloween regalia. The wedding took place in Farnsworth Park, outdoors in the amphitheater with the stage featuring a huge flower filled in with red rose petals outlined in marigolds. The bride was a vision of exotic splendor and the groom suitably handsome in a traditional Indian knee length jacket. The reception took place in the lodge where many of the scenes from Dirty Dancing were filmed. We worked on the decor all day, long tables with black table cloths and black lacquered runners strewn with white flower petals, hand made intricate tapestries that were made by two of Irene's friends hung from the rafters. They were on loan from an exhibition at a local art gallery. The head table was placed in front of the massive fireplace whose mantle had been lined with photos of absent family members. Catering by Wahib was a brilliant idea, great Lebanese food, a fabulous band, and a glittering array of family and friends added to the perfect event.
Staying at my brother and sister-in-law's is always a treat. Safe from the recent fires, the house sits at the foot of the San Gabriel mountains. The air was clear from the recent rains, and my one treat was a visit to The Folk Tree to see their Day of the Dead altars exhibit. it was more than inspiring. While I don't want to live in LA again, the "city hit" just wires my mind and sets my creative juices churning. Check out www.ladayofthedead.com to see what our next year's project may be. Irene has asked me to do this with her next year and we may have to make it a family event. Call it what you will, cross-cultural, multi-cultural, the blending of the hispanic tradition around the Day of the Dead with the LA flair for the dramatic is something to see. Since death is the theme of this time of year (and this time of my life!), I am filled with joy at the ways I have seen it expressed this last long weekend.
Staying at my brother and sister-in-law's is always a treat. Safe from the recent fires, the house sits at the foot of the San Gabriel mountains. The air was clear from the recent rains, and my one treat was a visit to The Folk Tree to see their Day of the Dead altars exhibit. it was more than inspiring. While I don't want to live in LA again, the "city hit" just wires my mind and sets my creative juices churning. Check out www.ladayofthedead.com to see what our next year's project may be. Irene has asked me to do this with her next year and we may have to make it a family event. Call it what you will, cross-cultural, multi-cultural, the blending of the hispanic tradition around the Day of the Dead with the LA flair for the dramatic is something to see. Since death is the theme of this time of year (and this time of my life!), I am filled with joy at the ways I have seen it expressed this last long weekend.
Friday, July 17, 2009
Call for Artists
Bijoux is bumbling along through the summer. Thanks to all of our supporters. Downtown Bellingham may make it, no thanks to the city fathers or mothers. I will be doing my yearly offrenda in Bijoux's front window for the Days of the Dead and had hoped to involve the local arts community with a nice exhibit like the one I saw in Mt. Vernon last year. But it is not to be. So, how about a grass roots sort of movement. Does anyone out there do artwork around the Day of the Dead theme? I would be happy to host your art at Bijoux for the month of October, and if it looks like I have too many takers, I'll help you find another spot to exhibit. Just drop by and talk it over with me. We all need to pull together in these "par'lous" times!
Monday, June 1, 2009
Almost as good as traveling!
I just began cataloging and pricing a 40 year collection of amazing artifacts from Panama, Peru, Ecuador, Guatemala, the Phillipines, India, Bali, Laos, Thailand and more. The collection has some pieces that belong in a museum and belongs to a man with an incredibly discerning eye, and a love for all things unique and exotic. I will begin integrating it into Bijoux as soon as I can. I even bought a new cabinet to house the baskets and pottery. This is great stuff that ranges from the mundane to the sublime. If you are in town drop by as I unfold all of these wonderful items into the shop. I even have the stories and dates to go with them! I feel incredibly privledged to be part of helping him divest a lifetime of travels and tales. In the midst of life's trials and tribulations, I am blessed with much.
Sunday, May 31, 2009
New musings, new travels. My mind slip back to Laos and Muzzy is itching to take the train to Lhasa. Northern India beckons and travel is on my mind. I need more great "stuff" for my great store, Bijoux, www.bijouxtradingcompany.com. It's movin' slow in this economy. I'm hanging on by a thread and I can almost see a light at the end of the tunnel. My web administrator says I need to push the site everywhere I can, so come out and support me! Visit my site, visit my store if you come to Bellingham.....Bijoux Bijoux Bijoux!!!
Sunday, March 29, 2009
Reflections on Guatemala
I am still conflicted about this trip. In retrospect there were many wonders, not the least of which was traveling with my favorite companion, being silly, and seeing the world without telephones, computers, televisions and such. Of all the marvels, I think the birds and beasts of Tikal stand out most for me. I still haven't gotten a bird book so I can read about them and show them to my mother and to Sarah and Don, but I looked some of them up on the net today. Of the mot mot, I have to say, I only got a very shady look at it and after seeing it's amazing tail in a photo, I wish I had seen more. Montezuma's Oropendula was so prolific, it was just commonplace, but always startling and it's voice was lovely. The Violaceous Trogon...a small, colorful bird with a huge name, was a real treat since they don't seem to be very common. And the keel billed Toucan still makes me think of Fruit Loops. I never thought I would see so many wonderful birds outside of a zoo...
As for the rest? Guatemala is an enigma to me. Parts of it were lovely and charming, but it was hard to get next to, hard to travel, and I've had some hard traveling before this. I just prefer Asia. There is something more welcoming, less tense, more like a soft embrace when I wander through those countries. Guatemala was hard in the way rocks in your shoes are hard, or the way a cold hard cement bench is hard. But the textiles dazzled my eyes and the mountains around Todos Santos were a moonscape with the giant agaves blooming indiscriminately on a landscape so bleak and dry. So I'm glad I got to see it all, of course. And I know that travel, any travel, is a privilege. I never take it for granted, and I hope I will get to do it again...maybe not to Guatemala, but somewhere. I'm certainly ready to go any time.
As for the rest? Guatemala is an enigma to me. Parts of it were lovely and charming, but it was hard to get next to, hard to travel, and I've had some hard traveling before this. I just prefer Asia. There is something more welcoming, less tense, more like a soft embrace when I wander through those countries. Guatemala was hard in the way rocks in your shoes are hard, or the way a cold hard cement bench is hard. But the textiles dazzled my eyes and the mountains around Todos Santos were a moonscape with the giant agaves blooming indiscriminately on a landscape so bleak and dry. So I'm glad I got to see it all, of course. And I know that travel, any travel, is a privilege. I never take it for granted, and I hope I will get to do it again...maybe not to Guatemala, but somewhere. I'm certainly ready to go any time.
Sunday, February 22, 2009
Next to Final Post
Belize...did all we could. Muz swam with the rays and the tarpins and the turtles and sharks, etc. etc. We sunned and sanded and found a remedy for sand flea bites. We gorged ourselves with the meat pie man´s wares, guzzled juice from Julia the Juice Lady and got pineappled, limed and grapefruited out. We had Dove bars in various incarnations and tried our darndest to find the perfect cup of coffee. We even saw a dead inflated blowfish! Eeek! Island life, mon...
We took a beautiful boat ride across azure waters to Belize City, a Christian cab ride to the airport (he preached the whole way there), surprised to find ourselves booked into first class on Taca Airlines to Salvador and then to Guatemala City. We´re back in Antigua now, preparing for the push home tomorrow. The Posada San Sebastian (yet another wacky room!) seems like home. We snuck out this morning before the parrot was up and headed across the plaza to Cafe Condessa for some good Guatemalan coffee and panqueques. Yummmmm....then off to the Artesanas Mercado for one last negotiation...ah more textiles...but really, your honor, I have a PLAN! And as Mr. Muzzy says, ¨Yo soy es Burro¨.
Thanks for enduring the posts. I intend to post a long boring Ïmpressions¨ wrap up whe we get home.
The Muzzys
We took a beautiful boat ride across azure waters to Belize City, a Christian cab ride to the airport (he preached the whole way there), surprised to find ourselves booked into first class on Taca Airlines to Salvador and then to Guatemala City. We´re back in Antigua now, preparing for the push home tomorrow. The Posada San Sebastian (yet another wacky room!) seems like home. We snuck out this morning before the parrot was up and headed across the plaza to Cafe Condessa for some good Guatemalan coffee and panqueques. Yummmmm....then off to the Artesanas Mercado for one last negotiation...ah more textiles...but really, your honor, I have a PLAN! And as Mr. Muzzy says, ¨Yo soy es Burro¨.
Thanks for enduring the posts. I intend to post a long boring Ïmpressions¨ wrap up whe we get home.
The Muzzys
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